“It’s crazy, I mean a total disregard of life in my opinion. They didn’t even attempt to at least render air.”

Harris was charged with theft and released. Mayo is facing multiple charges which include negligent auto homicide and negligent manslaughter.

Captian Zurolo lamented the unnecessary loss of life.

“For me, it’s really sad to see that someone could just dehumanize someone like that and leave the scene. … No need for it to rise to that level of violence where someone loses their life. Totally outrageous.”

We’re living in a world where life is cheap. What once was thought precious is being “progressively” devalued, by a compression on the years of life once relished as invaluable — those at the beginning and the end.

In 2016, during her debate against Donald Trump, radical presidential candidate Hillary Clinton refused to condemn partial birth abortion. In Australia, people are fighting for the right of the elderly and infirm to die (please see here).

Families are breaking down. And so is civility, toward our political foes, as I covered here.

Yet even if Chermaine Mayo’s crime and disregard for the life of her friend says nothing about the time in which we live, the fact that you aren’t more shocked, and the fact that I’m not more stunned, I believe, does.

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Thank you for reading! What do you think about this crime and its relation to cultural and legislative change? Please sound off in the Comments section below.